baseball

Penn Outlasts Dartmouth in 21 Innings, Longest Ivy League Game Ever

The game lasted 6 hours, 22 minutes.

Penn and Dartmouth have completed the longest game in Ivy League history, with the Quakers using an eight-run 21st inning to beat the Big Green 21-15 Saturday.

The game lasted 6 hours, 22 minutes. Penn's Josh Hood hit a three-run homer in his 11th plate appearance, keying the 21st-inning rally.

Craig Larsen hit a grand slam in the eighth and became the first Penn player to hit for the cycle in 19 years. The freshman had five of the team's program-record 30 hits.

Penn catcher Matt O'Neill played all 21 innings, squatting for 358 pitches. He was 3 for 6 with four RBIs and a Quaker-record five walks.

Dartmouth twice rallied from three runs down to keep the game going, first in the ninth inning and again in the 13th. Neither team scored from then until the 21st. Quakers right-hander Josh Sidney pitched three-hit ball over six scoreless relief innings before Joe Miller took over and got the win.

The game included several NCAA records:

-- The teams combined for 208 plate appearances, with Dartmouth taking 105.

-- Penn had 92 at-bats, and the sides combined for 176.

-- Larsen and teammate Peter Matt each had 12 at-bats.

Dartmouth also tied a Division I mark with 27 runners left on base.

The teams had planned to play a doubleheader. The late game was rescheduled as part of a doubleheader Sunday.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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